This letter is in response to your March 4 front page article regarding Wells being asked to drop the “Warriors” nickname. At Saint Anselm College, for our humanities course, we studied “Portraits of Human Greatness.” One unit we studied as freshmen was the warrior unit.

We studied warriors such as the Greek warriors of Homer’s “Illiad” and “The Odyssey”; Roman gladiators; knighthood as in Cervantes’ “Don Quixote;” Dumas’ “The Three Musketeers,” and even modern warriors such as those of World War II and Vietnam in the filmes “Patton” and “Apocalypse Now.”

When I think of warriors, I think of various national/military specialists, not any negative or offensive label. We studied warriors as honorable and protectors of the innocent, although some warriors could be blood-thirsty. That’s why we studied it. Good versus evil/right versus wrong/honorable versus dishonorable.

“Warriors” is a very strong name, and I believe it is used as a school mascot in the most honorable sense, with no offense intended whatsoever to American Indians or any people who are or were warriors.

I am not seeing that one nationality or race owns that moniker. Last, but not least, “Wells Warriors” is a fine alliteration, too.

-Vicki Vail, Saco



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